Aila Hoss on Tribal Public Health Data and Surveillance

Aila Hoss has posted her paper “Exploring Legal Issues in Tribal Public Health Data and Surveillance” on SSRN. Here is the abstract:

Tribes are sovereign nations with a government-to-government relationship with the United States. Within the United States, there are 573 federally recognized Tribal nations with distinct governments, cultures, and histories. Each Tribe exercises both political sovereignty and cultural sovereignty through Tribal governance and their unique cultural teachings. As part of the exercise of this sovereignty, Tribes have the inherent authority to engage in public health activities that support the safety and welfare of their citizens. An essential component to public health practice includes the collection and surveillance of health data. Surveillance data allows for the identification of health issues as well as instances in which certain populations are being disproportionately burdened by these health issues. This data is essential to effective policy making. Law is the foundation of public health practice, including the underpinnings of public health data collection and surveillance and ensuring the privacy of such data. Much has been written on public health data and surveillance at the state and local level. Yet, Tribal law and the federal laws that define the relationships between Tribes, states, and the federal government add an additional complexity to the collection and surveillance of law for American Indian and Alaska Natives. This article explores legal issues in Tribal data and surveillance. First, this article provides a summary of Tribal public health and health care systems. Next, it outlines surveillance laws and practical challenges in Tribal surveillance. Finally, it describes some of the legal strategies used to promote effective data collection and surveillance.

New Scholarship on Indian Self-Determination and Health Care

Geoffrey D. Strommer, Starla K. Roels, and Caroline P. Mayhew have published Tribal Sovereign Authority and Self-Regulation of Health Care Services: The Legal Framework and the Swinomish Tribe’s Dental Health Program [PDF] in the Journal of Health Care Law and Policy [Maryland].

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Arizona State Law to Host Conferences on Tribal E-Commerce and Indian Country Health Care

Here:

Inaugural Tribal Government E-Commerce: Innovating a New Geography of Indian Country CLE Conference

Date:   February 12, 8:00 a.m. – 5:30 p.m. & February 13, 8:00 a.m. – 5:15 p.m.

Place:  Wild Horse Pass Hotel & Casino Resort, Chandler, AZ
Contact:  Darlene Lester at darlene.lester@asu.edu or (480) 965-7715
Click here for Agenda & Registration  Early Rate ends Jan 9.  Register Early (Limited Seating)

Banquet Reception: Thursday, February 12, 6:30 p.m. – 8:30 p.m.

Many tribes have recently become involved in pursuing business operated over the Internet.  These E-Commerce opportunities have not only created thriving economies, but they have also led to a tangled web of legal issues where state, tribal and federal laws and policies are colliding. The quick growth of E-Commerce in Indian Country has outpaced a general understanding of how E-Commerce law is intertwined with federal Indian law especially as it may relate to States’ rights.

The goal of this conference is to explore the legal issues surrounding the development of E-Commerce in Indian Country including: jurisdictional complexities and the necessity of fostering open dialogue with federal and state counterparts, the possible implications to tribal sovereignty, and the ongoing need for tribes to build infrastructures that facilitate economic growth on their reservations while complying with appropriate federal guidelines.

This conference will bring together tribal leaders and officials, lawyers practicing in Indian country, on and off reservation economic planning and development experts, business and finance specialists, virtual casino managers and executives, online vendors and entrepreneurs, regulatory experts and cutting‐edge scholars to explore the legal issues of tribal E-Commerce.

 

 

Opportunities and Challenges to Providing Health Care in Indian Country CLE Conference

Date:   Thursday, February 26, 8 a.m. – 5 p.m. & February 27, 9 a.m. – 12 p.m.
Place:  Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law / Great Hall / Armstrong Hall / Tempe ASU
Contact:  Danielle Williams at danielle.williams.1@asu.edu or (480) 965-2922
Click here for Registration & Agenda  Early Rate ends Jan 16.

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